Vehicle registration plates of China

Vehicle registration plates in China are mandatory metal or plastic plates attached to motor vehicles in mainland China for official identification purposes. The plates are issued by the local traffic management offices, which are sub-branches of local public security bureaus, under the rules of the Ministry of Public Security.

A registration plate of China, registered in Sanming, Fujian

Hong Kong and Macau, both of which are special administrative regions of China, issue their own licence plates, a legacy of when they were under British and Portuguese administration. Vehicles from Hong Kong and Macau are required to apply for licence plates, usually from Guangdong province, to travel on roads in mainland China. Vehicles from mainland China have to apply for Hong Kong licence plates or Macau licence plates to enter those territories.

The font used are in the Heiti (Traditional: 黑體, Simplified: 黑体) style.

History

Blue PRC licence plates of the 1992 standard. This is an example of a vehicle registered to a Chinese citizen or entity.
Black PRC licence plates of the 1992 standard. This is an example of a vehicle registered to a foreign national, or a Chinese person who is not a citizen of mainland China

1986-series plate

Layout and examples of 1986-series plates.

In July 1986, the 1986-series Plates were put into use. The layout and format for them are listed out as follows:

Vehicle type Colouring Size (mm) Notes
Light passenger/cargo vehicles White on light green 300 x 165 May come with a letter replacing the first number.
Heavy goods vehicles White on violet
Heavy/light hand-assisted tractors,

special-use vehicles, electric cars

Black on yellow
Testing vehicles and training vehicles White on blue
Foreigner-owned vehicles White on black Red-on-black for limited-activity

(i.e. only allowed to drive within city limits denoted by the regional code)

Trailers Black on white
Plate replacement permits Red on white 200 × 120
Temporary plates Black on white
Two/three-wheeled motorcycles White on light green
Light motorcycles Violet on white

Hong Kong and Macau vehicles are issued with plates for Shenzhen (广东02) and Zhuhai (广东03), respectively. Red-on-black plate-bearing vehicles are only allowed to drive within said cities. White-on-black vehicles are permitted to drive within Guangdong province, while if the vehicles are issued with green or violet plates according to their types, they have no area limitations.

Public security vehicles (e.g. police) are issued with single-line plates with the format GARR-####, where the RR is the regional code, and the following numbers are the serial number, with the "GA" (abbreviation for 公安, gōng'ān, "Public security") in red.

The regional codes are as follows:

Region Code
Anhui 安徽
Beijing 北京
Fujian 福建
Gansu 甘肃
Guangdong 广东
Guangxi 广西
Guizhou 贵州
Hainan 海南
Hebei 河北
Heilongjiang 黑龙江
Henan 河南
Hubei 湖北
Hunan 湖南
Inner Mongolia 内蒙古
Jiangsu 江苏
Jiangxi 江西
Jilin 吉林
Liaoning 辽宁
Ningxia 宁夏
Qinghai 青海
Shaanxi 陕西
Shandong 山东
Shanghai 上海
Shanxi 山西
Sichuan 四川
Tianjin 天津
Tibet 西藏
Xinjiang 新疆
Yunnan 云南
Zhejiang 浙江

Note: Chongqing was separated from Sichuan as a directly-administered city in 1997, and the 1986-series standard was abolished in 1997 as well, therefore Public security vehicles in Chongqing bear the Sichuan code of GA51, instead of the later-introduced GA50.

1986-series plates are allowed to have the first number in the serial replaced by a letter with a special meaning, such as T for "taxi", Z for 自备车 (zìbèichē, "self-reserved vehicle"), G for 个体户 (gètǐhù, "entrepreneur").

Current Series types

Common types

Schematic diagram of plates (1)
Schematic diagram of plates (2)
Schematic diagram of plates (3)
Schematic diagram of plates (4)
Schematic diagram of plates (5)
Schematic diagram of plates (6)
GA 36-1992
GA 36-2014
GA 36-2018

The current plates are of GA36-2014 standard, a further update of the original GA36-1992, made from GB/T 3880.1 and GB/T 3880.2-compliant aluminum material with a thickness of no less than 1.2mm (for rear plates for large vehicles and trailers) or 1.0mm (for any other non-temporary plates), or 200-220g dedicated watermarked paper with plastic sealing for automobiles and motorcycles entering the border on a temporary basis, or 125g white paper-card for temporary license plates. The plates accommodate a one-character provincial abbreviation, a letter of the Pinyin alphabet, and five numbers or letters of the alphabet (Ex. 沪A·12345; 京C·A1234; 苏A·1P234; 浙B·AB987; 粤Z·7C59港). Previously, all licence plates had used the five-number designation. As the number of motor vehicles grew, however, the number had to exceed what was the maximum previously allowable—90,000 or 100,000 vehicles. Therefore, there had become a need to insert Latin letters into the license plate to increase the number of possible combinations (for the full list of alphanumeric sequences permitted see below). This was first done in the bigger cities with only one prefix. Nanjing, for example, began the change with only the first number, which increased the number of possible combinations to 340,000 (with the exceptions of O & I, which cannot be printed without confusion with the numbers 0 & 1). Further changes allowed the first two places, or the second place alone on the plate to be letters, allowing 792,000 more combinations mathematically. More recently, cities have taken to having the third letter alone being a letter, the rest numbers.

Permitted alphanumeric combinations per GA36-2014 standard are listed in the table below. Should the number of combinations issued exceed 60% of the theoretical capacity of its type, the combination next in the list may be put into use after approval from the Vehicle Management Office of the provincial Public Security authority and reporting to the Vehicle Management Office of the Ministry of Public Security.

Note: Y and N in this table reflects whether or not this combination type may be used in registration plates with 4 or 5 places for digits/numbers, while D and L represents any permitted digit or letter respectively.

OrderCombination4 places5 places
1DDDDDYY
2LDDDDYY
3LLDDDYY
4DLDDDYY
5DDLDDYY
6DDDLDYY
7DDDDLNY
8LDDDLNY
9DDDLLNY
10LDLDDYY
11DLLDDYY
12LDDLDYY
13DLDLDYY
14DLDDLNY
15DDLLDYY
16DDLDLNY

The numbers are produced at random, and are computer-generated at the issuing office. Numbers with a sequence of 6s, 8s, or 9s are usually considered to be lucky, therefore special sequences like "88888" or "86888" can be purchased through auction.[1][2] A previous licence plate system, with a green background and the full name of the province in Chinese characters, actually had a sequential numbering order, and the numbering system was eventually beset with corruption.[3]

License plates have different formats that are issued to different vehicles:

Vehicle Type Example Coloring Issued to
Small/Compact Vehicles White-on-Blue Regular vehicles
Small/Compact Vehicles (New Energy) 京A·D12345

京A·F12345

Black lettering on Gradient green Start with D (stands for 电) and A, B, C, E is for regular EV vehicles, start with F (stands for 非电) and G, H, J, K is for regular plug-in HEV vehicles
Large Vehicles (front)

(rear)
(trailer)

Black-on-yellow Vehicles longer than 6m or certified to carry 20+ passengers
Large Vehicles (New Energy) 京A·12345D

京A·12345F

Black lettering, yellow for the province code, green for the rest End with D is for large EV vehicles, end with F is for large plug-in HEV vehicles
Agricultural/Municipal vehicles (i.e. forbidden to leave city territory) 京01-00001

北京A-00001

连港·A0018

民航A·A0125

White-on-green Mainly agricultural vehicles. Vehicles operating in transport hubs (e.g. airports, ports) receive the "民航"(civil aviation) (for operation in airports) or "X港" (port X) (for operation in seaports, where X is the name of the port) instead of the Chinese character and the first pair of digits.
Coach cars Black-on-yellow Cars belonging to driving schools
Test car 京A·0001试
Black-on-yellow
Temporary license (intra-province) Black on patterned light blue (paper) Cars eligible for on-road driving but have not received a license plate yet
Temporary license (cross-province) Black on patterned brown (paper)
Prototypes 沪A·1234超 Black on patterned light blue (paper)
Foreigner-owned (Discontinued) 京A·10000
White-on-Black Cars belonging to foreigners, joint-stock companies, foreign companies and diplomatic staff.
Small Motorcycles (50cc or below) 54321 (Front) (discontinued per GA36-2014 standard)

沪 · C

54321 (Rear)

White-on-Blue
Large Motorcycles (Above 50cc) Same as above Black-on-yellow
Foreigner-owned motorcycle Same as above White on black Discontinued from Oct 2007

Since October 2007, black plates are no longer issued for vehicles belonging to foreigners, as this was "deemed discriminatory" and instead standard looking blue plates are now issued. However, foreigners still are issued a separate dedicated letter/number sequence to denote that they are a foreign owned/registered vehicle—e.g. in Beijing, the foreign owned plates are in the 京A·#####, 京L·B####, and 京L·C#### sequence. The black plates are still issued to those who registered in both mainland China and Hong Kong or Macau, specifically in Guangdong province, which are in the sequence of 粤Z·####港/澳.

Registration combinations of written-off vehicles may be "recycled", or used again on a different vehicle only after 6 months from the write-off according to relevant regulations, but as a matter of fact, certain serials of number like 京A·##### in Beijing is not available for general public once recycled for unspecified reasons. In 2015, a former Commissioner of Beijing Traffic Management Bureau, the traffic branch of Beijing Municipal Public Safety Bureau, was sentenced for life, having been found guilty of corruption relating to fraud in issuing these licence plate combinations.[4]

Police Service, Armed Police Force, and Military

Licence plates for China's Police Service, Armed Police Force, and Military are in a white background, with red and black text.

Police Service plates have a designated format of X·LLNNN (X is the geographical abbreviation, N is a digit, and L is either a digit or a letter; "" means police and is coloured red, but the separator dot is no longer a circle, rather, a dash). These plates are issued to traffic police, some patrol vehicles, court, and procuratorate vehicles.

Sample of a 2012 series CAPF plates (Replaced by the 2019 series as of Oct 2019)

The plates’ combination of the Chinese People's Armed Police Force ("武警") begins with the pinyin wujing abbreviation WJ.

The 2012 series of CAPF vehicle registration plates is in the WJ P NNNNL pattern, where the stands for a Chinese character i.e. for Beijing, serving as the provincial identifier, and the L denotes the first letter in pinyin of the branch of service. e.g. WJ沪 1234X = a vehicle for firefighting use in Shanghai

The 2004 series use the format WJNN-NNNNN.

The first two small letters behind the WJ are area prefixes:

  • WJ01-NNNNN. = Headquarters
  • WJ31-NNNNN. = Beijing
  • WJ14-NNNNN. = Shandong
  • WJ21-NNNNN. = Hainan

The Alphabet Numeral behind the area prefix shows the section of the Armed police:

  • WJ01-JNNNN. = Official Guards, Official and Diplomatic Escorts
  • WJ01-BNNNN. = Border Police
  • WJ01-XNNNN. = Firefighter (Fire Department)
  • WJ01-1NNNN. = Headquarters

Military vehicles previously had plates using a code of heavenly stems in red. After reorganization in 2004, again in 2013 military vehicles now use a more organized prefix. These licence plates use the format XL·NNNNN (X is a prefix, L is a letter).

The People's Liberation Army vehicle prefixes 2013:

Military vehicles can be identified by having a red letter from the alphabet *V

  • V PLA Central Military Commission
  • K PLA Air Force
  • H PLA Navy
  • B PLA Beijing Military
  • VA PLA Central Military Commission
  • VB PLA Political Works
  • VC PLA Logistical Support
  • VD PLA Equipment Development

The People's Liberation Army vehicle prefixes 2004:

  • "" (Jūn; "Military")

Vehicles of the Central Military Commission
Vehicles of the Headquarters of People's Liberation Army
Vehicles of the PLA's units at Army-Grade or above. Deputy-Military-Region-Grade, Military-Region-Grade.

The Ground Force of PLA vehicle of the various military regions have their own prefixes:

The Navy of PLA vehicle prefixes:

  • "" (Haǐ)

The Air Force of PLA vehicle prefixes:

  • "" (Kōng)

Vehicles with government or military plates are not subject to the Road Traffic Safety Law of the People's Republic of China (中华人民共和国道路交通安全法); they may run red lights, drive in the wrong direction or weave in and out of traffic.[5] Communist party officials and People's Liberation Army members are also exempt from paying road tolls and adhering to parking regulations.[6][7] According to Xinhua News Agency, "police officers are also reluctant to pull over drivers of military vehicles even if the drivers are breaking the law",[7][8] which is the reason behind an emerging trend in which individuals purchase counterfeit military registration plates to avoid being pulled over by police and to avoid road fees. Xinhua News Agency reported in 2008 that since July 2006, the government has confiscated over 4,000 fake military vehicles and 6,300 fake plates and has apprehended over 5,000 people belonging to criminal gangs; under Chinese law, those caught driving under fake registration plates are fined up to 2,000 RMB, and counterfeiters can be jailed for up to three years.[7][9]

Motorcycles

Motorcycle licence plates are nearly the same as that for ordinary vehicles, but are less in length and look more like an elongated square than a banner-like rectangle. There are two lines of text (province code and letter on the top, numbers on the bottom).

For qingqi or low-powered motorbikes, blue licence plates are issued throughout.

Embassies and consulates

Pre-2017 Chinese diplomatic license plate. The first code is the character: 使 (shǐ, literally "diplomatic"), representing the embassy. The code 132 represents the Czech Republic, but it may not be due to Beijing having codes unreleased due to privacy reasons.

Since 2017,[10][11] embassy and consulate vehicles have their own license plate with six white numbers followed by a single character denoting its diplomatic status, all on a black background (following the foreigner plate standard, as previously mentioned). Embassies use 使 (shǐ, from 使馆 meaning 'embassy') and are used only in Beijing. Consulates use (lǐng, from 领事馆 meaning 'consulate') and are used for representations outside Beijing. Numbers on embassy plates are formatted so that the first three digits represent the foreign entity/organization the vehicle is registered to while the last three digits are sequential, where 001 is (generally) the Ambassador's car, for example: 224·001使 is the car used by the American Ambassador. Numbers 002 to 005 are usually reserved for official use and therefore enjoy the comfort of the highest levels of diplomatic immunity.

In order to protect the privacy of foreign diplomats, the government does not release information on embassy vehicles, so it is possible that some data in the list of plate prefixes below may not be correct.

Diplomatic Codes
  • 101 -  Afghanistan
  • 102 -  Albania
  • 103 -  Algeria
  • 104 -  Angola
  • 105 -  Argentina
  • 106 -  Australia
  • 107 -  Austria
  • 108 -  Azerbaijan
  • 109 -  Bahrain
  • 110 -  Bangladesh
  • 111 -  Belarus
  • 112 -  Belgium
  • 113 -  Benin
  • 114 -  Bolivia
  • 115 -  Botswana
  • 116 -  Brazil
  • 117 -  Brunei
  • 118 -  Bulgaria
  • 119 -  Burkina Faso
  • 120 -  Burundi
  • 121 -  Cambodia
  • 122 -  Cameroon
  • 123 -  Canada
  • 124 -  Chad
  • 125 -  Chile
  • 126 -  Colombia
  • 127 -  Congo
  • 128 -  Ivory Coast
  • 129 -  Croatia
  • 130 -  Cuba
  • 131 -  Cyprus
  • 132 -  Czech Republic
  • 133 -  North Korea
  • 134 -  Denmark
  • 135 -  East Timor
  • 136 -  Ecuador
  • 137 -  Egypt
  • 138 -  Equatorial Guinea
  • 139 -  Eritrea
  • 140 -  Ethiopia
  • 141 -  Fiji
  • 142 -  Finland
  • 143 -  France
  • 144 -  Gabon
  • 145 -  Germany
  • 146 -  Ghana
  • 147 -  Greece
  • 148 -  Guinea
  • 149 -  Guyana
  • 150 -  Hungary
  • 151 -  Iceland
  • 152 -  India
  • 153 -  Indonesia
  • 154 -  Iran
  • 155 -  Iraq
  • 156 -  Ireland
  • 157 -  Israel
  • 158 -  Italy
  • 160 -  Jordan
  • 161 -  Kazakhstan
  • 162 -  Kenya
  • 163 -  Kiribati
  • 164 -  Kuwait
  • 165 -  Kyrgyzstan
  • 166 -  Laos
  • 167 -  Lebanon
  • 168 -  Libya
  • 169 -  Luxembourg
  • 170 -  Madagascar
  • 171 -  Malaysia
  • 172 -  Mali
  • 173 -  Malta
  • 174 -  Marshall Islands
  • 175 -  Mauritania
  • 176 -  Mexico
  • 177 -  Micronesia
  • 178 -  Mongolia
  • 179 -  Morocco
  • 180 -  Mozambique
  • 181 -  Myanmar
  • 182 -    Nepal
  • 183 -  Netherlands
  • 184 -  New Zealand
  • 185 -  Nigeria
  • 186 -  Norway
  • 187 -  Oman
  • 188 -  Pakistan
  • 189 -  Palestine
  • 190 -  Papua New Guinea
  • 191 -  Peru
  • 192 -  Philippines
  • 193 -  Poland
  • 194 -  Portugal
  • 195 -  Qatar
  • 196 -  South Korea
  • 197 -  Romania
  • 198 -  Russia
  • 199 -  Rwanda
  • 200 -  Saudi Arabia
  • 201 -  Senegal
  • 202 -  Seychelles
  • 203 -  Sierra Leone
  • 204 -  Singapore
  • 205 -  Slovakia
  • 206 -  Slovenia
  • 207 -  Somalia
  • 208 -  South Africa
  • 209 -  Spain
  • 210 -  Sri Lanka
  • 211 -  Sudan
  • 212 -  Sweden
  • 213 -   Switzerland
  • 214 -  Syria
  • 215 -  Tanzania
  • 216 -  Thailand
  • 217 -  Togo
  • 218 -  Tunisia
  • 219 -  Turkey
  • 220 -  Uganda
  • 221 -  Ukraine
  • 222 -  United Arab Emirates
  • 223 -  United Kingdom
  • 224 -  United States
  • 225 -  Uruguay
  • 226 -  Vanuatu
  • 227 -  Venezuela
  • 228 -  Vietnam
  • 229 -  Yemen
  • 230 -  Serbia
  • 231 -  Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • 232 -  Zambia


Other types

Vehicles for use in automobile tests, vehicles for use in driving schools (examination and test-driving), and vehicles at airports all have their own separate licence plates.

For automobile tests, licence plates consist of black characters on a yellow background with the suffix shi (试 short in Chinese for ce shi or test). For driving schools, different plates apply for test-drive vehicles (jiaolian che) and examination vehicles (kaoshi che).

Airports have licence plates with white characters on a green background with the designation min hang (民航; 'Civilian Air Transportation'). This shade of green is slightly lighter than the variant used on normal licence plates prior to 1992. Some vehicles belonging to airports that operate in its vicinity (rather than inside its perimeters) have dark-green lettering on a white background. These plates, unlike others, permit the use of letter I (as in the SPIA-A00 series used in Shanghai Pudong International Airport)

Sometimes, to avoid privacy invasion, modern Chinese TV show series are set in fictitious locations. Vehicles featured in these shows often carry registration plates with non-valid provincial abbreviations and/or invalid typefaces.

Cross-border with Hong Kong and Macau

Guangdong border crossing plate displayed on a vehicle below a standard Hong Kong plate.

Licence plates with a black background and the character or in place of the last number are used for Hong Kong and Macau vehicles, respectively, when they engage in cross-border traffic to and from mainland China. These plates often exist side by side with a local Hong Kong or Macau licence plates on the same car. See the section on Guangdong license plates.

Interim licence plates

Front of Interim licence plate (drive in an administrative area only)
Back of Interim licence plate (drive in an administrative area only)
Front of Interim licence plate (drive outside of an administrative area only)
Back of Interim licence plate (drive outside of an administrative area only)

Interim licence plates are a piece of paper to be affixed to the front of the vehicle's window, usually valid for 15 days.

Shortlived 2002 standard

Example of the 2002-standard plate.

For a short while in the summer of 2002, a new 2002 standard was instituted in several cities, including Beijing. They enabled number/alphabetical customisation. (The possible combinations were NNN-NNN, NNN-LLL and LLL-NNN, where N would be a number and L a letter. However, although the usage of "CHN", to designate China, was not permitted in the plates, that restriction, oddly enough, did not apply to the letters "PRC".) The VIN was also added to the new plates, and the plates were white, with a gradual blue tint at the bottom end of the plates. Black letters were used on the plate.

In late August 2002 new 2002 standard plates had their issuance temporarily interrupted, officially for technical reasons, but actually because some number/alphabetical combinations of a controversial nature in mainland China were utilised. One of the biggest controversies was when a vehicle with plate number USA-911 was spotted in Beijing, causing an uproar as it was taken to be a reference to the September 11 attacks, and as such was criticized as being disrespectful to Americans. Equal uproars were created with such plates as PRC-001, and trademark violations were rife; the plate number IBM-001 and was seen. The WTO acronym was also spotted in the plates. In a society that is still rather conservative in this topic, the plate SEX-001 was the source of yet another controversy. The number 250, an insult in spoken Chinese, was also spotted in some plates.

Possibly due to the controversies as described above, as of summer 2003, the new plates are no longer being issued. Old plates of the 2002 standard are not being recalled. Cars who have lost their 2002-standard plates are disallowed to get a 2002-standard replacement. The 1992-standard plates will be issued instead.

New 2007 Standard (GA36-2007)

GA 36-2007

The Ministry of Public Security has announced on October 30, 2007, that the 1992 vehicle license plate system will be overhauled on November 1, 2007.

  • The current black license plates assigned to foreign-owned vehicles will be phased out. New vehicles will be issued "normal" blue license plates.
  • Two roman letters (not including O, or I, which could be confused with numerals) may be included among the last five places of the plate number.

A minor difference between the 2007- and the 1992-standard plates is that the separator dot between the regional code and the serial on 2007-standard plates is embossed along the characters, while that on 1992-standard plates are pressed into the plate, in the opposite direction of the characters.

Number plates issued in the 1992 standard will not be recalled but black plates will no longer be issued. Neither will plates issued to embassies be affected.

It is believed this is a China-wide standard. Many provinces and municipal cities have since introduced personalized number plates with different limitations. It is generally possible to choose from several alphabetical-numerical combination and personalize some of the digits.

For some provinces it is possible to have a letter occupying the last place of the combination, possibly to increase combination numbers. [12]

New Energy vehicles license plates

Small New Energy vehicle license plate
Large New Energy vehicle license plate

On November 21, 2016, the MPS announced the New Energy vehicles license plates which have been instituted in Shanghai, Nanjing, Wuxi, Jinan, and Shenzhen since December 1, 2016. These plates consist of a one-character provincial abbreviation, a letter indicating the city, and a six-character alphanumerical string, in which "D" ("E") means Electric car, "F" means other types of vehicles powered by New Energy. For small vehicles or Large New Energy vehicles, this letter is located in the first place or the last place, respectively.[13]

New Energy Vehicle License Plates are instituted in more than 10 cities as of 2017.[14]

License Plate Fonts & Templates for New Energy Vehicles Plates & 2019-Standard Firetruck Plates

Dimensions for the Chinese character remains at 45 × 90 mm as the 1992 standard, whereas numbers are reduced to thinner 43 × 90mm dimensions alongside a change in font, which is now found on 2019-standard registration plates for firetrucks as well.

List of prefixes

The following lists all licence plate prefixes in use in the People's Republic of China, divided into four sections: municipalities, provinces, autonomous regions and others.

Beijing

The initial character on licence plates issued in Beijing is: (pinyin: Jīng)

  • 京A(Color in Yellow)-buses
  • 京C, 京E, 京F, 京H, 京J, 京K, 京L, 京M, 京P, 京Q - Urban area
  • 京B - Taxis
  • 京G - Suburbs
  • 京N, 京P, 京Y - Suburbs and urban area
  • 京A, 京LB, 京LC - foreigner or foreign company owned vehicle
  • 京O·A - Ministry of Public Security
  • 京V - Central Guard Bureau of Beijing Garrison Military License

Chongqing

The initial character on licence plates issued in Chongqing is: ()

The former division before May 18, 2017:

From May 18, 2017, Chongqing has no division for number plate prefixes, newly registed vehicles can choose any prefix among A, 渝B, 渝C, 渝F, 渝G, 渝H from any district and county in Chongqing.

Shanghai

The initial character on licence plates issued in Shanghai is: ()

  • 沪A, 沪B, 沪D, 沪E, 沪F, 沪G, 沪H, 沪J, 沪K, 沪L, 沪M, 沪N — Urban area and suburbs.
  • 沪C — Suburbs, not allowed to enter the urban area (i.e. not allowed to travel within the Outer Ring).
  • 沪RChongming Island, Changxing Island, Hengsha Island, not allowed to leave the places above.

For the third character of the license plates (with 4 digits following):

  • Z — New energy vehicles (except licenses begin with 沪A and 沪C).
  • M, N, U to X — Taxis.
  • Y — Vehicles for rent, owned by car renting operators.

Tianjin

The initial character on licence plates issued in Tianjin is: (Jīn)

  • 津A, 津B, 津C, 津F, 津G, 津H, 津I, 津J, 津K, 津L, 津M, 津N, 津P, 津Q, 津R — General Issues
  • 津E — Taxis
  • 津OMinistry of Public Security

Anhui

The initial character on licence plates issued in Anhui is: (Wǎn)

Fujian

The initial character on licence plates issued in Fujian is: (Mǐn)

Gansu

The initial character on licence plates issued in Gansu is: (Gān)

Guangdong

Black PRC licence plates of the 1992 standard for vehicles from Hong Kong that are permitted to cross into mainland China.

The initial character on licence plates issued in Guangdong is: (Yuè)

Guizhou

The initial character on licence plates issued in Guizhou is: (Guì)

Hainan

The initial character on licence plates issued in Hainan is: (Qióng)

Hebei

The initial character on licence plates issued in Hebei is: ()

Heilongjiang

The initial character on licence plates issued in Heilongjiang is: (Hēi)

Henan

The initial character on licence plates issued in Henan is: ()

Hubei

The initial character on licence plates issued in Hubei is: (È)

Hunan

The initial character on licence plates issued in Hunan is: (Xiāng)

Jiangsu

The initial character on licence plates issued in Jiangsu is: ()

Jiangxi

The initial character on licence plates issued in Jiangxi is: (Gàn)

Jilin

The initial character on licence plates issued in Jilin is: ()

Liaoning

The initial character on licence plates issued in Liaoning is: (Liáo)

Qinghai

The initial character on licence plates issued in Qinghai is: (Qīng)

Shaanxi

The initial character on licence plates issued in Shaanxi is: (Shǎn)

Shandong

The initial character on licence plates issued in Shandong is: ()

Shanxi

The initial character on licence plates issued in Shanxi is: (Jìn)

Sichuan

The initial character on licence plates issued in Sichuan is: (Chuān)

Yunnan

The initial character on licence plates issued in Yunnan is: (Yún)

Zhejiang

The initial character on licence plates issued in Zhejiang is: (Zhè)

Guangxi

The initial character on licence plates issued in Guangxi is: (Guì)

Inner Mongolia

The initial character on licence plates issued in Inner Mongolia is: (Měng)

Ningxia

The initial character on licence plates issued in Ningxia is: (Níng)

Xizang/Tibet Autonomous Region

Initial character of licence plates used in Xizang/Tibet Autonomous Region is: (Zàng)

Xinjiang

The initial character on licence plates issued in Xinjiang is: (Xīn)

See also

References

  1. Mah, Adeline Yen (2008). China: Land of Dragons and Emperors. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74175-467-4.
  2. Zhang, Jun (2019-10-15). Driving toward Modernity: Cars and the Lives of the Middle Class in Contemporary China. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-3841-8.
  3. ""房腐""证腐""号腐" 反腐也应"创新"". news.sina.com.cn. Retrieved 2021-10-23.
  4. "北京市交管局原局长宋建国一审被判无期徒刑". xw.qq.com. Archived from the original on 2019-11-23. Retrieved 2019-11-23.
  5. Fauna, 1 December 2009, Caught: Fake Chinese Military Vehicle License Plates, ChinaSMACK
  6. Wu Zhong, 21 November 2007, Drivers with a license to kill in China, Asia Times
  7. 12 April 2008, Bogus Military Vehicles And Plates Seized, Sky News
  8. 2008-04-11, Military Cracks Down on Fake License Plates, Xinhua
  9. 16 June 2009, Chinese army, police seize thousands of fake military license plates, IDs, People's Daily
  10. Hu Yongqi (18 February 2017). "New diplomatic vehicle regulation increases oversight". China Daily. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  11. Tenzin Woebom (15 February 2017). "Diplomatic vehicles in China to have new license plates before May". vtibet.com. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  12. Official Beijing Traffic Bureau announcement (Chinese)
  13. 新能源汽车专用号牌将在5城市试点启用. Ministry of Public Security of the People's Republic of China. 2016-11-21. Archived from the original on 2016-11-22. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
  14. 公安部将在全国逐步推广新能源汽车专用号牌. Ministry of Public Security of the People's Republic of China. 2017-08-13. Archived from the original on 2018-10-24. Retrieved 2017-08-14.
  15. 官方确认:佛山2月1日起统一上粤E牌 粤X粤Y成历史. 佛山公安. 2018-01-17. Retrieved 2018-01-18.
  16. “鲁O”“鲁W”车牌年底前彻底取消 明年起继续使用将受罚. 潍坊大众网. 2018-10-16. Retrieved 2018-10-17.
  17. 成都即将启用川G汽车牌照. 山西日报. 2017-08-23. Archived from the original on October 24, 2018. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  • Scanned images of GA36-2007 (License plate of motor vehicle of China)
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